Yea, and I can also remember when the pre Web Internet wasnt available and we all used BBS's. I ran one ( I was a SYSOP) with 12 Nodes using Mustang Software. Prior to Mustang I used some software that was written by a friend who was Editor of Commodore Magazine in Copperas Cove Texas at the time, I ran it on an Amiga using a 5 1/4 inch drive. We had stick men games (ASCHI), you could chat, and yes we had, by popular demand, porn. That came later when we moved to the 386's and were able to make it available on CD, and it was readily accessible (The Board) with a Commodore VIC-20 or 64 and a 1200 baud Modem. But for real speed, you might at that time have wanted to pick up a 64K ram expander module. I had over 500 subscribers paying 5 dollars a month for 2 hours a day unless they were just chatting then it was 4 hours and 10 dollars a month for unlimited. Then more people started buying 486's, mostly the SX33's when they were launched, they ran $4000-$5000. My first one I bought at Sears for around $4300. Had a 25mb HDD and 256K or RAM. Prodigy was launched and we lost a lot of our BBS customers, for a while. Until they started getting their phone bills. Didnt take long for them to come back. BBS's were a fun thing. We held meetings. The only way to pay was to meet me, so every other Friday night either I or one of my Co-SYSOPS would go have coffee at the local IHOP and everyone from 6PM to 11PM would stop by to pay their 5 or 10 dollars. We did a lot with what little we had back then. What finally killed us wasnt AOL either. Or the Web itself. It was Compuserve. They launched a competing service to AOL called WOW! And they offered free long distance connections and 24 hour unlimited service for 20 bucks a month. Not long after they launched, I and lots of other local BBS's closed up shop.